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Mapping Behavioral Repertoire onto the Cortex
Michael S.A. Graziano, Tyson N. Aflalo Neuron Volume 56, Issue 2, Pages (October 2007) DOI: /j.neuron Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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Figure 1 A Map of Stimulation-Evoked Movements in the Monkey Brain
At this time, the primary motor cortex located anterior to the central sulcus had not yet been distinguished from the primary somatosensory cortex located posterior to the sulcus. Adapted from Beevor and Horsley (1890). Neuron , DOI: ( /j.neuron ) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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Figure 2 Top View of a Monkey Brain Showing a Division of the Cortex into Motor and Premotor Cortex Adapted from Fulton (1934). Neuron , DOI: ( /j.neuron ) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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Figure 3 Two Maps of the Body in the Motor Cortex
The central sulcus is shown opened up, exposing the representation of the fingers and toes in the anterior bank of the sulcus. Adapted from Woolsey et al. (1952). Neuron , DOI: ( /j.neuron ) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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Figure 4 Some Commonly Accepted Divisions of the Cortical Motor System of the Monkey PMDr = dorsal premotor cortex, rostral division, also sometimes called Field 7 (F7). PMDc = dorsal premotor cortex, caudal division, also sometimes called Field 2 (F2). PMVr = ventral premotor cortex, rostral division, also sometimes called Field 5 (F5). PMVc = ventral premotor cortex, caudal division, also sometimes called Field 4 (F4). SMA = supplementary motor area. SEF = supplementarty eye field, a part of SMA. Pre-SMA = presupplementary motor area. FEF = frontal eye field. Neuron , DOI: ( /j.neuron ) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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Figure 5 Action Zones in the Motor Cortex of the Monkey
These categories of movement were evoked by electrical stimulation of the cortex on the behaviorally relevant timescale of 0.5 s. Images traced from video frames. Each image represents the final posture obtained at the end of the stimulation-evoked movement. Within each action zone in the motor cortex, movements of similar behavioral category were evoked. Action zones in the motor cortex of the monkey described in Graziano et al. (2002, 2005). Neuron , DOI: ( /j.neuron ) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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Figure 6 Cortical Mapping of the Spatial Locations to which Hand Movements Are Directed Within the arm representation of the monkey motor cortex, stimulation in dorsal cortex tended to drive the hand to lower space; stimulation in ventral cortex tended to drive the hand into upper space; stimulation in intermediate cortical locations tended to drive the hand to intermediate heights. Each image is a tracing of the final posture obtained at the end of a stimulation-evoked movement. Each dotted line shows the trajectory of the hand during the 0.5 s stimulation train. Dots show the position of the hand in 30 ms increments. These trajectories show the convergence of the hand from disparate starting locations toward a final location. Adapted from Graziano et al. (2002). Neuron , DOI: ( /j.neuron ) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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Figure 7 The Initial State of the Map Model
The map of the monkey body in the lateral motor cortex according to Woolsey et al. (1952) is shown, with an overlay showing the simplified, blocked arrangement of 12 body parts defined as the initial state of the motor cortex model. Neuron , DOI: ( /j.neuron ) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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Figure 8 Hand Locations Associated with Categories of Movement in the Model Three views of a schematized monkey showing the distribution of hand locations allowed for hand-to-mouth movements (light blue), reaching (dark blue), defense (red), central space/manipulation (green), and climbing (pink with black border). Neuron , DOI: ( /j.neuron ) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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Figure 9 Final State of the Map Model
(A–L) Representations of the 12 body parts after map reorganization. Warm colors = map locations in which the body part is more strongly represented. (M) Arrangement of the eight ethological categories of movement after reorganization. A dorsal region of the map represented movements of the arm, leg, and foot that did not fit into any of the eight specifically defined action categories. (N–P) Maps of hand location after reorganization. Only those nodes that had a non-zero magnitude of arm representation are colored, as only these nodes had a defined hand position. X = hand height, warm colors = greater height; Y = lateral location of hand, warm colors = more lateral locations; Z = distance of hand from body along line of sight, warm colors = more distant locations. (Q) Some common divisions of the monkey motor cortex drawn onto the map model. Neuron , DOI: ( /j.neuron ) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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Figure 10 Possible Hierarchical Organization of the Cortical Motor System Neuron , DOI: ( /j.neuron ) Copyright © 2007 Elsevier Inc. Terms and Conditions
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